Thromb Haemostasis
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Several biological medicines derived from human and animal plasmas can effectively improve haemostasis in individuals with inherited or acquired defects in haemostasis. Factor VIII and factor VIII/vWF and factor IX concentrates are used to treat haemophilia A, von Willebrand disease and hemophilia B respectively. Cryoprecipitates are used to treat hypofibrinogenemia and von Willebrand disease where desmopressin (DDAVP) is ineffective or when plasma-derived factor VIII/vWF concentrates are unavailable. ⋯ This safety concern has lessened significantly in the past decade as a result of the institution of more effective pre- and post-donation screening that tests for potential pathogens, and institution of pathogen reduction strategies to which many plasma-derived biological medicines are now routinely subjected. This article considers the manufacture, standardization, clinical efficacy and adverse event profiles of the plasma-derived biological medicines currently used to promote haemostasis in patients with inherited or acquired functional defects in haemostasis. It also considers approaches employed to minimize infectivity of biological medicines derived from human and animal plasmas and to manage patients who develop antibodies (inhibitors) to clotting factor concentrate infusions.
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Bivalirudin is a direct thrombin inhibitor (DTI) frequently used for anticoagulation in the setting of invasive cardiology, particularly percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Bivalirudin has a unique pharmacologic profile: unlike other marketed DTIs, it undergoes predominant non-organ elimination (proteolysis), and has the shortest half-life (approximately 25 min). Its affinity for thrombin is intermediate between that of lepirudin (highest) and argatroban (lowest)--this helps explain why it interferes with functional clotting assays to an extent intermediate between that achieved by these two other DTIs. ⋯ Bivalirudin is also indicated for PCI with provisional use of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa antagonist therapy, and for patients with, or at risk of, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT), or HIT with thrombosis syndrome (HITTS), undergoing PCI. The bivalirudin development program has used a "quadruple" endpoint comprising a "triple" efficacy endpoint plus major bleeding - this approach anticipated the subsequent emphasis on strategies to improve clinical outcomes through bleeding reduction. Besides summarizing the key trials evaluating bivalirudin use for acute coronary syndrome (especially employing PCI), we review also the studies of bivalirudin as anticoagulant for "on-" and "off-pump" cardiac surgery, including both HIT and non-HIT situations.